HELMUTH VON MOLTKE AND THE ORIGINS OF THE ...assets.cambridge.org/97805217/91014/frontmatter/...15 North Sea cruise, 1912(Süddeutscher Verlag-Bilderdienst, Munich) 123 16 Helmuth
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HELMUTH VON MOLTKEAND THE ORIGINS OF THE
FIRST WORLD WAR
This book explores the influence of Helmuth von Moltke,Germany’s Chief of the General Staff between 1906 and 1914.Based largely on previously unknown primary sources, it analysesthe General Staff’s role in military decision-making and Moltke’srelationship with Kaiser Wilhelm II, as well as the genesis of theSchlieffen Plan and Germany’s military and political reactions tothe many pre-war crises. Moltke’s influence on Germany’s politicaldecision-making is shown to have been decisive, helping to foster anincreasingly confrontational mood.
The book takes specific issue with the common perception ofMoltke as an ineffectual and reluctant military leader, rememberedprimarily for the defeat at the Battle of the Marne and his allegedadulteration of the Schlieffen Plan. It concludes that, on the con-trary, he was both bellicose and ambitious, hoping for war ‘thesooner the better’ and playing a crucial role in the outbreak andearly months of the First World War.
annika mombauer is Lecturer in European History, The OpenUniversity.
peter baldwin , University of California, Los Angeleschris topher clark , University of Cambridge
james b. collins , Georgetown Universitymia rodríguez-salgado , London School of Economics and
Political Sciencelyndal roper , Royal Holloway, University of London
This is a new series of scholarly monographs in early modern and modernEuropean history. Its aim is to publish outstanding works of research, addressedto important themes across a wide geographical range, from southern andcentral Europe, to Scandinavia and Russia, and from the time of theRenaissance to the Second World War. As it develops the series will comprisefocused works of wide contextual range and intellectual ambition.
Other titles in the series
Royalty and Diplomacy in Europe 1890–1914Roderick R. McLean
Catholic Revival in the Age of the BaroqueReligious Identity in Southwest Germany, 1550–1750
Marc R. Forster
Helmuth von Moltke and the Origins of the First World WarAnnika Mombauer
Peter the GreatThe Struggle for Power, 1671–1725
Paul Bushkovitch
FatherlandsState-Building and Nationhood in Nineteenth-Century Germany
Abigail Green
The French Second EmpireAn Anatomy of Political Power
List of illustrations page xList of maps xiiAcknowledgements xiiiHierarchy of ranks for officers in the German army before 1914 xivList of abbreviations xviGeneral map of Europe xvii
Introduction 1
1 Military decision-making in Wilhelmine Germany 14
2 Alfred von Schlieffen and Helmuth von Moltke: ‘militarygenius’ and ‘reluctant military leader’? 42
3 From crisis to crisis: the international background to militaryplanning in the pre-war years 106
4 The July Crisis and the outbreak of war: the Germanperspective 182
5 The General Staff at war 227
Conclusion. Myths and Realities: Helmuth von Moltke andthe origins of the First World War 283
Helmuth von Moltke in 1906 (Interfoto Pressebild-Agentur,Munich) frontispiece
11 Scenes at the annual summer manoeuvres, 1899 pages 60‒64a ‘The Garde du Corps on Parade’ (Courtesy of the ImperialWar Museum Photograph Archive, hu 68414)b The Kaiser (on horseback) talks to Archduke FranzFerdinand (Courtesy of the Imperial War MuseumPhotograph Archive, hu 68471)c The Kaiser greets his staff officers. (Courtesy of the ImperialWar Museum Photograph Archive, hu 68475)d The Kaiser with Moltke (left). (Courtesy of the ImperialWar Museum Photograph Archive, hu 68472)
12 Army manoeuvres, 1904. (Süddeutscher Verlag-Bilderdienst,Munich) 65
13 Colmar Freiherr von der Goltz, postcard c. 1914 7014 Kaiser Wilhelm II and Helmuth von Moltke, 1911
(Süddeutscher Verlag-Bilderdienst, Munich) 8915 North Sea cruise, 1912 (Süddeutscher Verlag-Bilderdienst,
Munich) 12316 Helmuth von Moltke, 1912 (Bildarchiv Preussischer
Kulturbesitz, Berlin) 13417 Archduke Franz Ferdinand and his wife Sophie, postcard
c. 1914 18318 Chancellor Theobald von Bethmann Hollweg in military
uniform, postcard c. 1916 18419 The mobilization order of 1 August 1914 21710 The Kaiser, with hand-written declaration, postcard c. 1914 21811 Wilhelm Groener during the First World War (Interfoto
Pressebild-Agentur, Munich) 24012 Alexander von Kluck, postcard c. 1914 241
Over the years that it took to research and write the doctoral thesis thatbecame this book, I have been fortunate in the help and support that Ihave received from many friends and colleagues in Germany andEngland – too many to mention them all here. I hope I have thankedthem in other ways.
My primary debt is to my supervisor, Professor John Röhl, whoseadvice, expertise and encouragement have been invaluable. It was hisenthusiasm for the history of Wilhelmine Germany that first made medecide to pursue my studies into the origins of the First World War.Moreover, I cannot thank John and Rosemarie Röhl enough for theirkindness and friendship over the years.
My thanks are also due to my examiners, Professor Hew Strachan andProfessor Jonathan Steinberg, and to Beryl Williams at the University ofSussex, for their advice and interest in the subject.
I am most grateful for the financial support that I received from theBritish Academy. Without it, I could not have undertaken the researchon which this book is based. My thanks also go to the archives andlibraries I have visited, including the Bundesarchiv-Militärarchiv,Freiburg, the Bundesarchiv, Abteilung Potsdam, the GeheimesStaatsarchiv, Berlin-Dahlem, the Politisches Archiv des AuswärtigenAmtes in Bonn, the Bayerisches Hauptstaatsarchiv-Kriegsarchiv, Munichand the Sächsisches Hauptstaatsarchiv, Dresden. The PhotographArchive of the Imperial War Museum kindly provided some of the illus-trations in this book. I should also like to thank Rose-Marie von Berghesand Marie-Liza von Bethusy-Huc, Helmuth von Moltke’s granddaugh-ters, for talking to me about their memories of their grandparents.
I am indebted to many friends and colleagues for reading parts of themanuscript at various stages, for their welcome suggestions for improve-ments, and for making additional material available to me. My particu-lar thanks go to Dr Robert Foley, for his friendship, his military expertise,
and his interest in discussing Moltke with a non-military historian likeme. Konrad Donat in Bremen has helped me enormously over the lastyears, providing me with valuable material on Moltke and Steiner, andwith insightful comments on draft chapters. Dr Paul Lawrence has readthe text with incredible attention for detail and has made valuable sug-gestions for improvements. He has been a greater help than he realizes.
Finally, like many historians who come to dedicate their first book, I,too, am indebted to my parents for putting up with such an unusualchoice of profession and for supporting me in every way. By way ofthanks, woefully inadequate, this book is dedicated to my mother, SybilleUlinski, to whom I owe the biggest debt of all.
AA Auswärtiges AmtAOK Armee-Oberkommando (Army High Command)BA-MA Bundesarchiv-Militärarchiv, FreiburgBayHSTA-KA Bayerisches Hauptstaatsarchiv-Kriegsarchiv, MunichBEF British Expeditionary ForceDD Die deutschen Dokumente zum Kriegsausbruch
KA KriegsarchivKGFA Kriegsgeschichtliches Forschungsamt des HeeresNL Nachlaß (papers)NDB Neue Deutsche Biographie
MGM Militärgeschichtliche Mitteilungen
MS ManuscriptNCOs Non-Commissioned OfficersOHL Oberste HeeresleitungOberost Oberkommando Osto.D. ohne Datum (no date)PA Bonn Politisches Archiv des Auswärtigen Amtes, BonnPRO Public Record Office, LondonSächs. HSTA Sächsisches Hauptstaatsarchiv, DresdenTB Tagebuch (diary)